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Microhabitat Characteristics That Regulate Ant Richness Patterns: The Importance of Leaf Litter for Epigaeic Ants

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Microhabitat Characteristics That Regulate Ant Richness Patterns: The Importance of Leaf Litter for Epigaeic Ants. / Queiroz, Antonio C. M.; Ribas, Carla Rodrigues; Machado Franca, Filipe.
In: Sociobiology, Vol. 60, No. 4, 2013, p. 367-373.

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Queiroz ACM, Ribas CR, Machado Franca F. Microhabitat Characteristics That Regulate Ant Richness Patterns: The Importance of Leaf Litter for Epigaeic Ants. Sociobiology. 2013;60(4):367-373. doi: 10.13102/sociobiology.v60i4.367-373

Author

Queiroz, Antonio C. M. ; Ribas, Carla Rodrigues ; Machado Franca, Filipe. / Microhabitat Characteristics That Regulate Ant Richness Patterns : The Importance of Leaf Litter for Epigaeic Ants. In: Sociobiology. 2013 ; Vol. 60, No. 4. pp. 367-373.

Bibtex

@article{d452ccbaacf44bfaa9185eb0231274b8,
title = "Microhabitat Characteristics That Regulate Ant Richness Patterns: The Importance of Leaf Litter for Epigaeic Ants",
abstract = "We assessed the effect of conditions and resources on the species richness of epigaeic ants in a cloud forest of the Ibitipoca State Park, Brazil. We hypothesized that the characteristics that are best related with the epigaeic microhabitat affects ant richness more closely than other characteristics. At each sampling site (36 in total) we set up an epigaeic pitfall to capture ants and measured the following environmental variables (conditions and resources): tree density, tree height, circumference at breast height, density of the herbaceous and shrubby vegetation, weight and heterogeneity of the leaf litter, and canopy cover. We built general linear models and used a function that classifies alternative models according to the second-order Akaike information criterion (AICc), in order to assess which environmental variables affect ant species richness. We collected 37 ant species and the models that better explained the variations in ant richness were: (1) null model; (2) heterogeneity of the leaf litter; and (3) weight of the leaf litter. These two environmental variables are positively related to ant richness. It is possible that epigaeic ants are influenced by the high quantity and quality of food and nesting sites provided by a heterogeneous and abundant leaf litter. Relationships between species richness and environmental characteristics should consider different predictor variables related to the microhabitat, since each microhabitat may have a specific pattern and predictor variable. Thus, the understanding of the effects of the microhabitat variables on species richness could help predicting the consequences of anthropogenic impacts",
author = "Queiroz, {Antonio C. M.} and Ribas, {Carla Rodrigues} and {Machado Franca}, Filipe",
year = "2013",
doi = "10.13102/sociobiology.v60i4.367-373",
language = "English",
volume = "60",
pages = "367--373",
journal = "Sociobiology",
issn = "0361-6525",
publisher = "California State University, Chico",
number = "4",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Microhabitat Characteristics That Regulate Ant Richness Patterns

T2 - The Importance of Leaf Litter for Epigaeic Ants

AU - Queiroz, Antonio C. M.

AU - Ribas, Carla Rodrigues

AU - Machado Franca, Filipe

PY - 2013

Y1 - 2013

N2 - We assessed the effect of conditions and resources on the species richness of epigaeic ants in a cloud forest of the Ibitipoca State Park, Brazil. We hypothesized that the characteristics that are best related with the epigaeic microhabitat affects ant richness more closely than other characteristics. At each sampling site (36 in total) we set up an epigaeic pitfall to capture ants and measured the following environmental variables (conditions and resources): tree density, tree height, circumference at breast height, density of the herbaceous and shrubby vegetation, weight and heterogeneity of the leaf litter, and canopy cover. We built general linear models and used a function that classifies alternative models according to the second-order Akaike information criterion (AICc), in order to assess which environmental variables affect ant species richness. We collected 37 ant species and the models that better explained the variations in ant richness were: (1) null model; (2) heterogeneity of the leaf litter; and (3) weight of the leaf litter. These two environmental variables are positively related to ant richness. It is possible that epigaeic ants are influenced by the high quantity and quality of food and nesting sites provided by a heterogeneous and abundant leaf litter. Relationships between species richness and environmental characteristics should consider different predictor variables related to the microhabitat, since each microhabitat may have a specific pattern and predictor variable. Thus, the understanding of the effects of the microhabitat variables on species richness could help predicting the consequences of anthropogenic impacts

AB - We assessed the effect of conditions and resources on the species richness of epigaeic ants in a cloud forest of the Ibitipoca State Park, Brazil. We hypothesized that the characteristics that are best related with the epigaeic microhabitat affects ant richness more closely than other characteristics. At each sampling site (36 in total) we set up an epigaeic pitfall to capture ants and measured the following environmental variables (conditions and resources): tree density, tree height, circumference at breast height, density of the herbaceous and shrubby vegetation, weight and heterogeneity of the leaf litter, and canopy cover. We built general linear models and used a function that classifies alternative models according to the second-order Akaike information criterion (AICc), in order to assess which environmental variables affect ant species richness. We collected 37 ant species and the models that better explained the variations in ant richness were: (1) null model; (2) heterogeneity of the leaf litter; and (3) weight of the leaf litter. These two environmental variables are positively related to ant richness. It is possible that epigaeic ants are influenced by the high quantity and quality of food and nesting sites provided by a heterogeneous and abundant leaf litter. Relationships between species richness and environmental characteristics should consider different predictor variables related to the microhabitat, since each microhabitat may have a specific pattern and predictor variable. Thus, the understanding of the effects of the microhabitat variables on species richness could help predicting the consequences of anthropogenic impacts

U2 - 10.13102/sociobiology.v60i4.367-373

DO - 10.13102/sociobiology.v60i4.367-373

M3 - Journal article

VL - 60

SP - 367

EP - 373

JO - Sociobiology

JF - Sociobiology

SN - 0361-6525

IS - 4

ER -